Jaitley, speaking at a reception hosted by India's Ambassador to the US Navtej Sarna, said the Indian government was looking forward to working with the Trump administration to strengthen bilateral ties.
Stressing that the India-US relationship has bipartisan support in the two countries, he said, "In one sense it is a bipartisan relationship. I am sure it would be a great privilege for us to continue with the new administration to strengthen the various dimensions of this relationship.
"The India-US relationship over the last few decades has significantly improved. It is far stronger, far matured. It defied the changes in the government whether in the US or in India," he said.
"I met the (US) Commerce Secretary yesterday. I will meet the (US) Treasury Secretary tomorrow. This would be the first contact at that level between the new Trump administration and government of India," he said.
During the meeting with US Commerce Secretary yesterday, Jaitley strongly raised India's concerns over the Trump administration's move to tighten the H-1B visa regime, highlighting the key role played by Indian professionals in boosting the American economy.
Jaitley outlined the significant contributions the skilled Indian professionals have made to the US economy and expressed the hope that the US administration will take this aspect into consideration while taking any decision.
Jaitley, leading an Indian delegation, arrived here On April 20, to attend the annual Spring meetings of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.
"There is a little more optimism this year than I have seen in the last three years (at the IMF/World Bank meetings). This seems to be the good news, as far as these meetings are concerned," he said.
Speaking about India's growth story, he said, "In the last three years even in the midst of a slowdown across the world, India has been able to grow in the range of seven to eight per cent. That is the rate of growth that we have fairly maintained. Our all other economic parameters seems to be fairly well under control."
"India has become one of the most open economies of the world. Most of our sectors are open for international investment. And we have been attracting one of the largest investments that any country has been attracting in the world.
"And it is a combination of this investment which is coming into India, coupled with higher public spending, even as the private sector spending was a little low, that has kept the Indian growth process going," he said.
"India has learned from its past experiences. And this itself has helped in cleaning up the entire process. We have now undertaken a very ambitious reform for cleaning up the system of political funding in India, something which had been eluding Indian democracy for quite some time," he said.
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